4 eanunculacejE. (crowfoot family.) 



ariloba, DC, an early state, when all the leaflets are linear.) — Swamps and 

 banks of rivers. May and June. — Stems 2° - 4° high, somewhat shrubby at 

 the base. Flowers 1 ' - 1 ^' long, pale bluish-purple. 



6. C reticulata, Walt. Smooth ; leaves pinnate ; leaflets 7-9, oval, 

 entire or 2-3-lobed, obtuse or mucronato, coriaceous, strongly reticulated ; calyx 

 ovate ; sepals ovate-lanceolate, with spreading tips, not margined, longer than 

 the stamens ; tails of the achenia [\\' long) slender, plumose. — Dry sandy soil, 

 Florida to South Carolina. May - July. — Calyx downy, dull purple. 



* * Flowers panided ! calyx thin, spreading, white: stems woody. 



7. C. Virginiana, L. Smooth ; leaves tcrnate ; leaflets ovate or cordate- 

 ovate, lobed or toothed ; panicle trichotonious, many-flowered, leafy ; flowers 

 dioecious or polygamous ; sepals obovate, smoothish ; tails of the achenia long, 

 plumose. — Swamps and meadows. July. — Leaflets 2' -3' long. 



8. C. Catesbyana, Pursh. Pubescent ; leaves biternate ; leaflets ovate, 

 mostly cordate, 3-toothed or lobed ; panicle leafy, many-flowered, the branches 

 divaricate, opposite, 3 - 5-flowered ; flowers dioiicious ; sepals oblong, hoary; 

 tails of the achenia plumose. — Dry sandy soil, near the coast, Florida to South 

 Carolina, and westward. July. — Stem climbing high. Leaves and flowers 

 smaller than the last. 



9. C. holosericea, Pursh. Silky-pubescent ; leaves tcrnate ; leaflets 

 oblong-lanccolato, entire ; flowers dioecious, in paniculate corymbs ; sepals lin- 

 ear, longer than the stamens ; tails of the achenia very long, plumose. — South 

 Carolina, "Walter. — Flowers small, white. ( « ) 



3. ANEMONE, L. Wind-flower. 



Sepals 4-20, colored, imbricated in the bud, deciduous. "Petals none. Sta- 

 mens indefinite. Filaments filiform. Ovsvries numerous. Ovule solitary. 

 Achenia capitate, compressed, pointed by the short, naked or woolly, sti-aight 

 or hooked, persistent style. Seed suspended. — Perennial herbs, with naked 

 stems, bearing at the summit 2-3 opposite or whorled and divided leaves, which 

 form an involucre remote from the flower. Radical leaves lobed or divided. 



1. A. nemorosa, L. (Wood Anemone.) Smooth or pubescent ; stem 

 1-flowered ; leaves of the involucre 3, long-petioled, 3-parted, the divisions ovate- 

 lanceolate, lobed and toothed, longer than the peduncle ; sepals 4-6, oval, white ; 

 achenia 15-20, pointed by the hooked perisistcnt style. — Open woods along 

 the mountains and northward. March -April. — Stems 4' -6' high. Eadical 

 leaf solitaiy. 



2. A. Caroliniana, Walt. (Caeolina Anemone.) Stem slender, 

 1-flowered ; peduncle many times longer than the small, sessile, 3-leaved, 

 8-toothed involucre; radical leaves 2-3, long-petioled, teraate, deeply parted, 

 lobed and toothed ; sepals 14-20, oblong, white ; achenia numerous in a cylin- 

 drical-oblong head, woolly. — North Carolina and westward. March. — Stems 

 6'- 12' high. Flowers 1' in diameter. 



